Tuberose is my favorite flower, I think -- but it really depends what it’s combined with. If it’s surrounded by resins, it goes sweet and swoony and it’s too over-the-top for me. Here, though, it’s a very green, botanical tuberose, like stepping into a greenhouse.
It gets sweeter and more feminine on my skin, and the rose comes up, all poignant and pink and glowing, but it stays very pure and crystalline.
Lousy longevity. Gone after a few hours. But they’re beautiful hours.
Revisiting Enderlein's Perspective in the 21st Century
Revisiting Enderlein’s Perspective in the 21st Century
As an individual who provides training in the Enderlein perspective, including the Live or Native Blood Analysis for the health care community, I am in contact with many individuals who are representative of divergent scientific and philosophical backgrounds. The queries that I receive during training sessions are often quite provocative and I have learned to use the three magic words that all…
The following article is Part 3 in a series. Part 1 appeared in Volume 10, Number 6, and Part 2 appeared in Volume 11, Number 3, of Explore ! For those of you who haven’t read or need a reminder regarding the first two installments of this commentary, I present a short review. The original article was a response to an article authored by Ronald Ullman on Magistrate Gerner’s paper, on the subject…
New Scientific Findings and Their Impact on the Enderlein Perspective, Part II
New Scientific Findings and Their Impact on the Enderlein Perspective, Part II
In the Vol. 10, Number 6 issue of Explore! For the Professional I reported on new scientific findings on the Enderlein Perspective as authored by Ronald Ullmann, Biochemist, Calw, Germany. In this article, I wish to present further material for consideration in that line of scientific inquiry with the intention of clarifying the information for the use of microscopists and biological…
New Scientific Findings and Their Impact on the Enderlein Perspective
New Scientific Findings and Their Impact on the Enderlein Perspective
This paper is written as a response to the recent findings on pleomorphism that have been presented by Ronald Ullmann, a biochemist who resides in Calw, Germany. The conclusions that are presented by Mr. Ullmann are based on the published research findings of Dr. Christopher Gerner, Ph.D. It should be noted that Mr. Ullmann is the son-in-law of the family that owns San-Pharma, a competitor in the…
“Writing about music is like dancing about architecture”: Google this quotation and you’ll find it attributed to any of a dozen people ranging from Thelonious Monk to Lou Reed, from Martin Mull to Elvis Costello to Frank Zappa. Doubtless there’s a story to be told about how this quip turned into the stuff of urban legend. But most everyone who has ever thrilled to a favorite song knows the force of it. I sure do. I’ve been writing about—or trying to write about—music since I was in college, driven by the sheer futility of it, but also by that deeply human need to communicate what is beyond words.
Hegel believed that music is the art of arts precisely because it is beyond language, and any number of philosophers and aestheticians after him have tried to explain its power with arguments about how music bypasses the rational mind and works directly on the soul. I don’t know. I can only say that anytime I’m moved by music I feel in the presence of something much bigger than me. There are analogous moments in the other arts, including the one I’m trained to teach, but nowhere else do attempts to express what I’m feeling more seem only inadequate translations.
In high school I did what music-besotted teenagers usually do—played in garage bands. Needless to say those efforts also felt like translations (though they were better than the poems I was writing). Eventually I made my way into college radio, and discovered in its mix of discussion and transmission new possibilities of community. To “translate” means to convey; radio affords one opportunity to do that. It’s not just the occasional call from a listener who likes something I’m spinning—it has also been the company of other DJs. I broadcast at WRCU, Radio Colgate University. Every semester I meet new ‘RCU DJs whose passion for music rivals my own. I’m lucky. But getting involved at first took a little pressure from Professor of English Emeritus Bob Blackmore, who with the glittering eye of some Ancient Mariner called me to task. It was Bob who negotiated my first being asked by the WRCU board to serve as station adviser, and I’ll always be grateful for that. For about 15 years, about once a week, I was a regular visitor in Bob’s den, enjoying late-into-the-night conversations over growing stacks of LPs. He himself was still doing shows back then, and in retrospect I realize that the ongoing contests we’d get into (I’d play something on my show, to which he’d respond the next night on his, challenging me to “top that”) amounted to a sustained graduate seminar, conducted with the deftest of touches. Bob, too, was always looking for connections with the music.
I called my first WRCU show “R&Be-bop.” I was then as now seeking music that busted genres as well as expectations. My theme song was Big Joe Turner’s 1959 “Switchin’ in the Kitchen,” and I’d play things like Jimmy’s Liggins’ 1947 jump blues cover of Charlie Parker’s be-bop masterpiece, “Now’s the Time.” But after Bob’s passing it was time to pick up the torch. I couldn’t replace Bob, but I could carry on in my own way. So I conceived a new show, calling it after (and choosing as my new theme song) the Mills Blue Rhythm Band’s 1933 swingfest, “A Jazz Martini.” As a good cocktail mixes and balances ingredients and spirits, so this show drew on everything from 1920s Hot Jazz to the contemporary avant-garde. Two years ago, however, my life changed completely: the legendary (at least to jazz record geeks like me) “Slim,” of Cadence Records, left her job to start a new life with me here in Hamilton. Let me make it fast with one more thing and say that she is still working with Cadence: I wouldn’t sabotage my favorite record label! With Slim in town I quickly found myself in new weekly radio contests—with her throwing down challenges every bit as hard as Blackmore’s. This situation lasted three semesters before it dawned on us that we’d have more fun doing one show together. And so, the name of my show changed once again, becoming “Slim and Him,” with a new theme song: Mingus’ 1959 recording, “Boogie Stop Shuffle.” Now there’s a dance!
Radio remains my regular but not sole means of trying to share the joy: music is important to my course, “The Jazz Age”; I write academic articles about jazz and pop history; I’m developing a book about cover songs; I offer jazz lectures for Colgate's Challenges of Modernity course; and I continue to review jazz books and records for Cadence magazine. Sometimes I think I come close to producing language that’s just about adequate, but most of the time I finish a piece simply resolving to do better next time. I’ve learned that that’s the whole Faustian point. As F. Scott wrote, it eluded me then, but that’s no matter—tomorrow I’ll run faster, stretch out my arms father….And one fine morning—
☊
Originally published in The Colgate Scene.
The eternal Gemini, Michael Coyle's double life means—on the one side—scholarly work on modernist poetry, radio (when it was still a new technology), and the emergence of popular culture. On the other side—struggling against his academic training—he writes about pop music and jazz for independent journals. His longtime involvement with college radio means that, by this point, he has been broadcasting longer than the student DJs at WRCU have been alive.
Presentation video of the event 'Got A Tattoo' created on Facebook by our research group.
A collection of photographs and explanations of people's choice of ink!
sam dexter, kendall cummings, jed case, michael coyle